Dating sites in shenzhen

19-Jan-2017 15:04

It is even strongly suggestive of systemic scamming - that these letters are sent out by the system itself rather than by personal agents.Today (14 July 2014), I came upon the smoking gun that all but proves that this is the case: the second line of a letter from "Shanshan(Joan)" contained a typo which reveals that, apparently, variables such as can be set in these letters, strong evidence that these letters are actually generated by a script which replaces variables with values and then automatically sends the letters out.

For some reason, the women started addressing their messages to "Not" rather than to "Michael", presumably because I had previously registered an account "Not Real", although I'm not sure how that account/name became linked to the "Michael Michaelson" account.My suspicions were aroused by my friend's description of the site: drop-dead gorgeous women everywhere, constantly sending him letters and chat pop-up requests, yet for every letter read after a lady's first, he had to pay ten credits, and ten credits likewise to send a lady a reply letter - instant messaging chats cost one credit per minute after the first three (free) minutes.Credits could be bought at varying rates depending on how many you bought at a time, ranging from per ten credits to per ten credits.Otherwise, read on for the build-up to that evidence. They never stopped, only increasing in frequency over the following few days.

The vast majority of the "women" (I quote that word only because it is entirely possible that behind any of these messages was a man) messaging "Michael" sported profile pictures that looked professionally photographed, and most of the ladies could even have passed for professional models - in all likelihood, many if not most of these images were of professional models.The site, which I won't link to, because I don't want to improve its search ranking, is asiandate.com, also operating under the domain aliases (i.e.without the "n"), and (more on these alternative domain names later), and redirecting upon registration from the domain In any case, the frequency of the pop-ups didn't abate - if anything, it increased.

Nov 7, 2017. As shoppers gear up for the biggest e-retail event of the year, China's so-called Singles Day, the National Development and Reform Commission released a list of 500 shady sellers, part of an effort to shore up trust in China's online retail scene. A total of 87 of the 'discredited' companies – approximately 17.… continue reading »